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Internal Troubles, External Threats. China, the Ottoman Empire, and Japan 1800-1914. Overview. Refocusing of racism in the 19 th century West Effects of Western dominance on the empires of Asia Reasons behind the collapse of the Chinese and Ottoman empires
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Internal Troubles, External Threats China, the Ottoman Empire, and Japan 1800-1914
Overview • Refocusing of racism in the 19th century West • Effects of Western dominance on the empires of Asia • Reasons behind the collapse of the Chinese and Ottoman empires • Reasons for Japan’s rise to its position as an industrial superpower and compare Japan’s experience with that of China
European Imperialism • Most peoples of Asia, Middle East, Africa, and Latin America had to deal in some way with European imperialism. • China, the Ottoman Empire, and Japan faced internal crises while maintaining formal independence • Four main dimensions of European imperialism confronted these societies: • Military might and political ambitions of rival European states • Involvement in a new world economy that radiated from Europe • Influence of aspects of traditional European culture (language, religion, literature) • Engagement with the culture of modernity
The External Challenge: European Industry and Empire • The 19th c. was Europe’s greatest age of global expansion • Became the center of the world economy • Millions of Europeans moved to regions beyond Europe • Explorers and missionaries reached nearly everywhere • Much of the world became part of European colonies
New Motives, New Means • The Industrial Revolution fueled much of Europe’s expansion • demand for new raw materials and agricultural products • Need for markets to sell European products • European capitalists often invested money abroad • Foreign markets kept workers within Europe employed
Nationalism • Growth of mass nationalism in Europe made imperialism broadly popular • Italy and Germany unified by 1871 • Colonies were a status symbol
New Technology • Industrial-age developments made overseas expansion possible • Steamships • Underwater telegraph • Quinine • Breech-loading rifles and machine guns
New Perceptions of the “OTHER” • In the past, Europeans had largely defined others in religious terms • But also had adopted many foreign ideas and techniques • Mingled more freely with Asian and African elites • “noble savages”
Attitude Adjustment • The industrial age promoted a secular arrogance among Europeans • Sometimes combined with a sense of religious superiority • Europeans increasingly despised other cultures • African societies lost status • New kind of racism, expressed in terms of modern science
“Weaker Races” • Sense of responsibility- duty to civilize them • Bringing them education, health care, Christianity, good government, etc. was regarded as “progress” and “civilization” • Social Darwinism: an effort to apply Darwin’s evolutionary theory to human history Pears Soap Ad
Reversal of Fortune: China’s Century of Crisis • 1793- Qianlong’s letter to King George • Chinese authorities had controlled and limited European activities for centuries • By 1912, Chinese empire collapsed, became a weak junior member in European dominated world
The Crisis Within • China was a victim of its own success • Population had grown from 100 million in 1685 to 430 million in 1853 • But- NO INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION • Growing pressure on the land, impoverishment, starvation • Chinese bureaucracy didn’t keep pace with growing population • By 1800, county magistrates had to deal with 4x as many people as in 1400 • Central state gradually lost control of provincial officials and gentry • Bandit gangs and peasant rebellions became common
Taiping Uprising • Affected much of China 1850-1864 • Leader Hong Xiuquan proclaimed himself the younger brother of Jesus, sent to establish a “heavenly kingdom of great peace” • Called for racial equality • Planned to industrialize China • Taiping forces established their capital at Nanjing • Rebellion was crushed by 1864
Resolution • Consolidated the power of the provincial gentry even more • Intense conservatism, so China’s problems weren’t resolved • Massive civil war had seriously weakened the Chinese economy • 20-30 million people died in the rebellion (700,000 deaths in American Civil War)
Opium Wars • Opium had been used in China on a small scale for centuries • British began to sell large quantities of Indian opium in China • Chinese authorities recognized the dangers of opium addiction, tried to stop the trade • European merchants bribed officials to smuggle opium in • China suffered a specie drain from large quantities of silver spent on opium • 1836, the emperor decided to suppress the trade
Opium Wars • The British responded with the first Opium War 1839-1842 • Forced Chinese to accept free trade and “proper” relations among countries • Treaty of Nanjing (1842)
Second Opium War 1856-1858 • Europeans vandalized the imperial Summer Palace • More treaty ports were opened to foreign missionaries • Western powers were given the right to patrol some of China’s interior waterways
Other Defeats • Also defeated by the French (1885) and Japanese (1895) • Qing Dynasty was deeply weakened at a time when China needed a strong government to deal with modernization • “unequal treaties” inhibited China’s industrialization
Failure of Conservative Modernization • Government tried to act against the problems • Self-strengthening 1860s and 1870s • Application of traditional Confucian principles, along with very limited borrowing from the West • Efforts to improve examination system • Restoration of rural social and economic order • Establishment of some modern arsenals and shipyards, some study of other languages and sciences
Pushback • Conservative leaders feared that development would harm the landlord class • Boxer Rebellion (1900): militia organizations killed many Europeans and Chinese Christians, besieged foreign embassies in Beijing • Western powers and Japan occupied Beijing to crush the revolt • Imposed massive reparation payments on China
Fall of the Qing • Educated Chinese disillusioned with the Qing dynasty • Organizations to examine the situation and propose reforms • Growing drive for a truly unified nation in which more people took part in public life • Chinese nationalism was against both foreign imperialists and the foreign Qing dynasty • The government agreed to some reforms in the early 20th c. but not enough – the imperial order collapsed in 1911
Ottoman Empire and the China • Felt that they did not need to learn from the West • Avoided direct colonial rule, but were diminished • Attempted “defensive modernization” • Suffered a split in society between modernists and those holding traditional values
“The Sick Man of Europe” • 1750: the Ottoman Empire was strong; the center of the Islamic world • By 1900- known as “the sick man of Europe” • Region by region, Islamic world fell under Christian rule, and the Ottomans couldn’t prevent it • Ottomans lost territory to Russia, Britain, Austria, and France • Napoleon’s 1798 invasion of Egypt was especially devastating • Greece, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Rumania attained independence
Ottoman State • Central state had weakened • Provincial authorities and local warlords gained more power, limited the government’s ability to raise money • The Janissaries had become militarily ineffective
Economy hurt by West • Europeans achieved direct access to Asia • Cheap European manufactured goods harmed Ottoman artisans • Foreign merchants won immunity from Ottoman laws and taxes • Government came to rely on foreign loans to finance economic development efforts • Reached a state of dependency on Europe
Reform and Its Opponents • Ottomans attempted ambitious reforms, going considerably further than the Chinese • Didn’t have an internal crisis on the scale of China • Did not have to deal with explosive population growth • Rulers were Turkic and Muslim, not like foreign Qing
Selim III • Late 18th c. tried to establish new military and administrative structures • Sent ambassadors to study European methods • Imported European advisors • Established technical schools • After 1839: more far-reaching measures (Tanzimat) • Beginning of an extensive process of industrialization and modernization • Acceptance of the principle that all citizens are equal before the law • Tide of secular legislation and secular schools
Supporters Wanted Secularism • Reform created a new class of writers, etc- the “Young Ottomans” • Urged creation of a constitutional regime • Islamic modernism: accepted Western technology and science, but not its materialism
Sultan Abdal-Hamid II (r. 1876-1909) • Accepted a new constitution in 1876 that limited the sultan’s authority • Almost immediately suspended it • Turned to older style of despotism in the face of a Russian invasion
Young Turks • Opposition coalesced around the “Young Turks” (military and civilian elites) • Advocated a militantly secular public life • Shift to thinking in terms of a Turkish national state • Military coup (1908) gave the Young Turks real power • Antagonized non-Turkic peoples in the Ottoman Empire • Stimulated Arab and other nationalisms • The Ottoman Empire completely disintegrated after World War I
Outcomes: Comparing China and the Ottoman Empire • By 1900, both were “semicolonies” • Both gave rise to a new nationalist conception of society • China: the imperial system collapsed in 1911 • Followed by a vast revolution • Creation of a Communist regime by 1949 • Ottoman Empire: the empire collapsed following WWI • Chinese revolutionaries rejected Confucian culture much more than Turkish leaders rejected Islam
The Rise of Japan • 1853- Commodore Matthew Perry forced Japan to open to relations with the world • 1853-1900: radical transformation of Japanese society • Japan became powerful, modern, united, industrialized • Japan created its own East Asian empire
Tokugawa Background • Tokugawa shoguns had ruled since about 1600 • Main task was preventing civil war among rival daimyo • Enjoyed internal peace from 1600-1850 • Daimyo were strictly regulated but retained considerable autonomy • Japan wasn’t unified by a single law, currency, or central authority that reached local level • Hierarchical society: samurai at the top, then peasants, artisans, and merchants at the bottom
Tokugawa Changes • Samurai evolved into a bureaucratic/administrative class • Great economic growth, commercialization, and urban development • By 1750, Japan was perhaps the most urbanized country • High literacy rates • Change made it impossible for the shogunate to freeze society • Widespread corruption
American Intrusion and Meiji Restoration • Commodore Perry made demands • Shogun appeared spineless which triggered a civil war • 1868, a group of young samurai from the south took over • They claimed to be restoring the 15-year-old emperor Meiji to power • Aimed to save Japan from the foreigners by transformation of Japanese society rather than by resistance • The West wasn’t as interested in Japan as it was in China
Japanese Modernization • Created national unity • Attacked power and privileges of the daimyo and samurai • Dismantled the Confucian-based social order • Almost all Japanese became legally equal • Widespread interest in many aspects of the West, from science to hairstyles • Official missions were sent to the West • Hundreds of students studied abroad • Translation of Western books into Japanese
More Changes • Feminism and Christianity made little progress • Shinto was raised to the level of a state cult • State guided industrialization program • established model factories, opened mines, built railroads, created postal, telegraph, and banking systems • many state enterprises were then sold to private investors • accomplished modernization without acquiring foreign debt
Price of Modernization • Many peasant families were impoverished • Countryside suffered infanticide, sale of daughters, and famine • Early urban workers received harsh treatment • Efforts to organize unions were repressed
Japan and the World • Japanese empire building • Wars against China and Russia • Gained colonial control of Taiwan and Korea, won a foothold in Manchuria • Japan’s rise was widely admired • Japan’s colonial policies were at least as brutal as European ones
Questions • What differences can you identify in how China, the Ottoman Empire, and Japan experienced Western imperialism and confronted it? How might you account for those differences? • “The response of each society to European imperialism grew out of its larger historical development and internal problems.” What evidence might support this statement? • What kind of debates, controversies, and conflicts were generated by European intrusion within each of the societies examined?